'Jurassic World' velociraptor kicks Iron Man ass at worldwide box office. 'Jurassic World' officially surpasses 'The Avengers' at worldwide box office Directed by Colin Trevorrow; starring Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, and Vincent D'Onofrio; and co-executive-produced by Steven Spielberg, Jurassic World has officially become the third biggest worldwide box office hit in history. The Jurassic Park sequel – or reboot, as it's basically the same story with a slightly different twist – has surpassed Marvel's Joss Whedon-directed all-star superhero flick The Avengers, which broke box office records back in 2012. Of course, "officially" just ain't what it used to be – like, in the days before The Fall. So you wisely ask, "But which movie has actually sold the most tickets?" After all, that's the true measure of a film's popularity. Well, that's a tough one to answer without the studios providing accurate, precise numbers. And that's not about to happen. It always...
- 7/26/2015
- by Zac Gille
- Alt Film Guide
New Mentalist season 6,episode 10 spoilers & clips hit the net. Last night, CBS dropped the new spoilers and sneak peek/ spoiler clip (below) for their upcoming "The Mentalist" episode 10 of season 6. The episode is entitled, "Green Thumb," and it looks quite entertaining as Patrick appears to be have a little fun with his new FBI peeps, and more. In the new "Green Thumb" episode, The FBI is going to reluctantly enlist Patrick's help to find a missing computer programmer, but he won't help unless Teresa is brought on board as well. Cheat Tweet: It’s a whole new world for Jane – and for the FBI. Is this new arrangement going to work? #TheMentalist 12/8 10 Pm http://bit.ly/1icXjqt. Guest stars are going to include: Emily Swallow as Kim Fischer, Joe Adler as Jason Wylie, Azita Ghanizada as Defiance Schneiderman, Shannon McClung as Agent Collins, Shane Edelman as Abel Schneiderman, Alejandro Cardenas as Jose Martinez,...
- 12/2/2013
- by Eric
- OnTheFlix
New Mentalist season 6,episode 10 official spoilers,plotline revealed by CBS. Recently,CBS released the new,official,synopsis/spoilers for their upcoming "The Mentalist" episode 10 of season 6. The episode is entitled, "Green Thumb," and it sounds like it'll be pretty intriguing as Patrick refuses to offer his services to the FBI unless they allow Teresa to get involved with the new case, and more. In the new,10th episode press release: The FBI is going to reluctantly enlist Jane's help to find a missing computer programmer, but he won't help unless Lisbon is brought on board as well. Cheat Tweet: It’s a whole new world for Jane – and for the FBI. Is this new arrangement going to work? #TheMentalist 12/8 10 Pm http://bit.ly/1icXjqt. Guest stars will feature: Emily Swallow as Kim Fischer, Joe Adler as Jason Wylie, Azita Ghanizada as Defiance Schneiderman, Shannon McClung as Agent Collins, Shane Edelman as Abel Schneiderman,...
- 12/1/2013
- by Derek
- OnTheFlix
‘Avatar 2′ and follow-up sequels’ release dates revealed (image: Na’vi Sam Worthington in ‘Avatar’) Avatar, James Cameron’s late 2009 (and early 2010) blockbuster that spearheaded the (currently dwindling) popularity of 3D movies, will have three sequels. Why exactly that has come as a surprise revelation for some is unclear. Sigourney Weaver, who for quite a while has been scheduled to return for the Avatar sequels, had already mentioned that there would be three movies, filmed concurrently much like Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit trilogies. Anyhow, James Cameron and Avatar distributor 20th Century Fox have announced that the three sequels will be released as follows: Avatar 2 (not to be confused with Avatar: The Last Airbender or Avatar: The Legend of Korra or online thumbnail avatars) will reach theaters in December 2016, a full seven years after the original. The second sequel (or third Avatar...
- 8/6/2013
- by Zac Gille
- Alt Film Guide
A 3 1/2 year investigation into the kidnapping and murder of the American journalist shows that 27 men were involved in the crime-and 14 of them remain free on the streets of Pakistan.
Almost nine years ago, on January 23, 2002, Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was kidnapped off the streets of Karachi, Pakistan, brutally killed a week or so later, beheaded, and chopped into 12 pieces. In July 2002, four men were convicted of Pearl's murder, including mastermind Omar Sheikh and three men involved in sending out ransom notes to the world. Pakistan closed the case. The U.S. let the case go dormant, with one FBI agent told by his boss, "Let sleeping dogs lie."
Related story on The Daily Beast: An American in Full
In "The Truth Left Behind: Inside the Kidnapping and Murder of Daniel Pearl," a 3 1/2 year investigation by the Pearl Project, reveals that, in fact, justice was not served. Leads weren't followed.
Almost nine years ago, on January 23, 2002, Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was kidnapped off the streets of Karachi, Pakistan, brutally killed a week or so later, beheaded, and chopped into 12 pieces. In July 2002, four men were convicted of Pearl's murder, including mastermind Omar Sheikh and three men involved in sending out ransom notes to the world. Pakistan closed the case. The U.S. let the case go dormant, with one FBI agent told by his boss, "Let sleeping dogs lie."
Related story on The Daily Beast: An American in Full
In "The Truth Left Behind: Inside the Kidnapping and Murder of Daniel Pearl," a 3 1/2 year investigation by the Pearl Project, reveals that, in fact, justice was not served. Leads weren't followed.
- 1/20/2011
- by Asra Q. Nomani & Barbara Feinman Todd
- The Daily Beast
The characters of "All You Need" need a referee -- and the viewer could use a scorecard to keep track of the play-by-play action that occurs during one year in the lives of a seemingly together American family.
"Need", which had its world premiere at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, is a talky, mostly civilized group meltdown with strongest prospects as a cable item.
A small theatrical release is a possibility for a film with much verbal spiciness but no interfamilial nastiness so dire that viewers will be haunted. In any event, it's up to lead Kellie Martin (NBC's "ER," the CBS telefilm "About Sarah") to lure in the young and mature female audience the U.S. indie needs to survive in unkindly and even combative marketplaces. Tyro director Randy Ser co-wrote the screenplay with fellow producer Sam Hensley Jr., and there are some undeniably effective sequences and performances in "Need".
Given the subject matter of alcoholism, divorce, marital infidelity and starting over in life, Ser and Hensley show admirable restraint and strive for an actor's showcase, which will be good enough for those viewers in the mood for a round of predictable ups and downs in the scripted "real world."
The table is set for a magnificent Thanksgiving dinner, with three married sisters (Martin, Kayren Ann Butler, Amy Raymond) joining their mother (Janet Carroll), father (Robert Pine) and forgetful granny (Gloria Le Roy). Although sundry spouses and grandchildren attend, the celebration turns sour, like so many before it, when old habits lead to unpleasant behavior by the clan's soused matriarch (Carroll).
It's only the beginning for Beth (Martin), who loses her husband Sean Patrick Murphy) to another woman and goes through a numbing divorce. There to represent her and go the extra step of proposing they have an affair is the lawyer husband (Chris Shea) of one unsuspecting sister (Butler), while the other sis (Raymond) starts talking about sexual role-playing games and eventually ends her marriage in a flurry of scandalous developments.
But it's Mom who becomes such a problem that the sisters get a court order to force her to go into treatment for alcoholism, while cowardly Dad offers no solutions and won't abandon his mate. To put it another way: moms and dads -- can't understand them, can't stand under them. The filmmakers and performers are admirably in sync, and the ultimate message Beth gets out of it is "sail away, free bird."
ALL YOU NEED
Klag Prods.
Director: Randy Ser
Screenwriters: Sam Hensley Jr., Randy Ser
Producers: Sam Hensley Jr., Randy Ser, Mike Gabrawy
Executive producer: Randy Holleschau
Director of photography: Jim Orr
Production designer: Erik Olson
Editor: Kimberly Rettberg
Costume designer: Emma Trenchard
Music: David Bergeaud
Casting: Elisabeth Jereski
Color/stereo
Cast:
Beth Sabistan: Kellie Martin
Faran Crenshaw: Kayren Ann Butler
Missy Rampley: Amy Raymond
Jane Sabistan: Janet Carroll
Earl Sabistan: Robert Pine
Nana Sabistan: Gloria Le Roy
Chuck Starnes: Sean Patrick Murphy
Roger Crenshaw: Chris Shea
Running time -- 98 minutes
No MPAA rating...
"Need", which had its world premiere at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, is a talky, mostly civilized group meltdown with strongest prospects as a cable item.
A small theatrical release is a possibility for a film with much verbal spiciness but no interfamilial nastiness so dire that viewers will be haunted. In any event, it's up to lead Kellie Martin (NBC's "ER," the CBS telefilm "About Sarah") to lure in the young and mature female audience the U.S. indie needs to survive in unkindly and even combative marketplaces. Tyro director Randy Ser co-wrote the screenplay with fellow producer Sam Hensley Jr., and there are some undeniably effective sequences and performances in "Need".
Given the subject matter of alcoholism, divorce, marital infidelity and starting over in life, Ser and Hensley show admirable restraint and strive for an actor's showcase, which will be good enough for those viewers in the mood for a round of predictable ups and downs in the scripted "real world."
The table is set for a magnificent Thanksgiving dinner, with three married sisters (Martin, Kayren Ann Butler, Amy Raymond) joining their mother (Janet Carroll), father (Robert Pine) and forgetful granny (Gloria Le Roy). Although sundry spouses and grandchildren attend, the celebration turns sour, like so many before it, when old habits lead to unpleasant behavior by the clan's soused matriarch (Carroll).
It's only the beginning for Beth (Martin), who loses her husband Sean Patrick Murphy) to another woman and goes through a numbing divorce. There to represent her and go the extra step of proposing they have an affair is the lawyer husband (Chris Shea) of one unsuspecting sister (Butler), while the other sis (Raymond) starts talking about sexual role-playing games and eventually ends her marriage in a flurry of scandalous developments.
But it's Mom who becomes such a problem that the sisters get a court order to force her to go into treatment for alcoholism, while cowardly Dad offers no solutions and won't abandon his mate. To put it another way: moms and dads -- can't understand them, can't stand under them. The filmmakers and performers are admirably in sync, and the ultimate message Beth gets out of it is "sail away, free bird."
ALL YOU NEED
Klag Prods.
Director: Randy Ser
Screenwriters: Sam Hensley Jr., Randy Ser
Producers: Sam Hensley Jr., Randy Ser, Mike Gabrawy
Executive producer: Randy Holleschau
Director of photography: Jim Orr
Production designer: Erik Olson
Editor: Kimberly Rettberg
Costume designer: Emma Trenchard
Music: David Bergeaud
Casting: Elisabeth Jereski
Color/stereo
Cast:
Beth Sabistan: Kellie Martin
Faran Crenshaw: Kayren Ann Butler
Missy Rampley: Amy Raymond
Jane Sabistan: Janet Carroll
Earl Sabistan: Robert Pine
Nana Sabistan: Gloria Le Roy
Chuck Starnes: Sean Patrick Murphy
Roger Crenshaw: Chris Shea
Running time -- 98 minutes
No MPAA rating...
The characters of "All You Need" need a referee -- and the viewer could use a scorecard to keep track of the play-by-play action that occurs during one year in the lives of a seemingly together American family.
"Need", which had its world premiere at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, is a talky, mostly civilized group meltdown with strongest prospects as a cable item.
A small theatrical release is a possibility for a film with much verbal spiciness but no interfamilial nastiness so dire that viewers will be haunted. In any event, it's up to lead Kellie Martin (NBC's "ER," the CBS telefilm "About Sarah") to lure in the young and mature female audience the U.S. indie needs to survive in unkindly and even combative marketplaces. Tyro director Randy Ser co-wrote the screenplay with fellow producer Sam Hensley Jr., and there are some undeniably effective sequences and performances in "Need".
Given the subject matter of alcoholism, divorce, marital infidelity and starting over in life, Ser and Hensley show admirable restraint and strive for an actor's showcase, which will be good enough for those viewers in the mood for a round of predictable ups and downs in the scripted "real world."
The table is set for a magnificent Thanksgiving dinner, with three married sisters (Martin, Kayren Ann Butler, Amy Raymond) joining their mother (Janet Carroll), father (Robert Pine) and forgetful granny (Gloria Le Roy). Although sundry spouses and grandchildren attend, the celebration turns sour, like so many before it, when old habits lead to unpleasant behavior by the clan's soused matriarch (Carroll).
It's only the beginning for Beth (Martin), who loses her husband Sean Patrick Murphy) to another woman and goes through a numbing divorce. There to represent her and go the extra step of proposing they have an affair is the lawyer husband (Chris Shea) of one unsuspecting sister (Butler), while the other sis (Raymond) starts talking about sexual role-playing games and eventually ends her marriage in a flurry of scandalous developments.
But it's Mom who becomes such a problem that the sisters get a court order to force her to go into treatment for alcoholism, while cowardly Dad offers no solutions and won't abandon his mate. To put it another way: moms and dads -- can't understand them, can't stand under them. The filmmakers and performers are admirably in sync, and the ultimate message Beth gets out of it is "sail away, free bird."
ALL YOU NEED
Klag Prods.
Director: Randy Ser
Screenwriters: Sam Hensley Jr., Randy Ser
Producers: Sam Hensley Jr., Randy Ser, Mike Gabrawy
Executive producer: Randy Holleschau
Director of photography: Jim Orr
Production designer: Erik Olson
Editor: Kimberly Rettberg
Costume designer: Emma Trenchard
Music: David Bergeaud
Casting: Elisabeth Jereski
Color/stereo
Cast:
Beth Sabistan: Kellie Martin
Faran Crenshaw: Kayren Ann Butler
Missy Rampley: Amy Raymond
Jane Sabistan: Janet Carroll
Earl Sabistan: Robert Pine
Nana Sabistan: Gloria Le Roy
Chuck Starnes: Sean Patrick Murphy
Roger Crenshaw: Chris Shea
Running time -- 98 minutes
No MPAA rating...
"Need", which had its world premiere at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, is a talky, mostly civilized group meltdown with strongest prospects as a cable item.
A small theatrical release is a possibility for a film with much verbal spiciness but no interfamilial nastiness so dire that viewers will be haunted. In any event, it's up to lead Kellie Martin (NBC's "ER," the CBS telefilm "About Sarah") to lure in the young and mature female audience the U.S. indie needs to survive in unkindly and even combative marketplaces. Tyro director Randy Ser co-wrote the screenplay with fellow producer Sam Hensley Jr., and there are some undeniably effective sequences and performances in "Need".
Given the subject matter of alcoholism, divorce, marital infidelity and starting over in life, Ser and Hensley show admirable restraint and strive for an actor's showcase, which will be good enough for those viewers in the mood for a round of predictable ups and downs in the scripted "real world."
The table is set for a magnificent Thanksgiving dinner, with three married sisters (Martin, Kayren Ann Butler, Amy Raymond) joining their mother (Janet Carroll), father (Robert Pine) and forgetful granny (Gloria Le Roy). Although sundry spouses and grandchildren attend, the celebration turns sour, like so many before it, when old habits lead to unpleasant behavior by the clan's soused matriarch (Carroll).
It's only the beginning for Beth (Martin), who loses her husband Sean Patrick Murphy) to another woman and goes through a numbing divorce. There to represent her and go the extra step of proposing they have an affair is the lawyer husband (Chris Shea) of one unsuspecting sister (Butler), while the other sis (Raymond) starts talking about sexual role-playing games and eventually ends her marriage in a flurry of scandalous developments.
But it's Mom who becomes such a problem that the sisters get a court order to force her to go into treatment for alcoholism, while cowardly Dad offers no solutions and won't abandon his mate. To put it another way: moms and dads -- can't understand them, can't stand under them. The filmmakers and performers are admirably in sync, and the ultimate message Beth gets out of it is "sail away, free bird."
ALL YOU NEED
Klag Prods.
Director: Randy Ser
Screenwriters: Sam Hensley Jr., Randy Ser
Producers: Sam Hensley Jr., Randy Ser, Mike Gabrawy
Executive producer: Randy Holleschau
Director of photography: Jim Orr
Production designer: Erik Olson
Editor: Kimberly Rettberg
Costume designer: Emma Trenchard
Music: David Bergeaud
Casting: Elisabeth Jereski
Color/stereo
Cast:
Beth Sabistan: Kellie Martin
Faran Crenshaw: Kayren Ann Butler
Missy Rampley: Amy Raymond
Jane Sabistan: Janet Carroll
Earl Sabistan: Robert Pine
Nana Sabistan: Gloria Le Roy
Chuck Starnes: Sean Patrick Murphy
Roger Crenshaw: Chris Shea
Running time -- 98 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 3/15/2001
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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